Professor Akira Kawaguchi
received his B.S. and M.S. degrees in Administration Engineering from
Keio University in Yokohama
Japan, and M.S., M.Phil, and Ph.D degrees in Computer Science from Columbia University. Prior to his
academic career, Professor Kawaguchi worked for Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, Ltd as
an assistant manager in its Tokyo presidential office. He then
acquired Mitsubishi's two-year fellowship for his graduate studies in
the U.S. He left Japan with one-way ticket, devoted to the forefront
of database research, and developed lifelong collaborations with
researchers in Columbia, Bell Labs, IBM Research, and various Japanese
industries. Since September 1997, he has been a faculty member of the
Department of Computer
Science at the City
College of New York and the CUNY
Graduate Center. Professor Kawaguchi has been recognized as one
of a small and invaluable class of scholars with the ability to build
an intellectual bridge between the U.S. and Far East countries.
Professor Kawaguchi has been serving chair of the Computer Science
Department since October 2013. His strategic vision is to promote the
continuing transformation of the Department into a powerful research
unit as an integral part of its educational mandate, as well as to
redefine Computer Science education for enhancement of career
prospects, especially, to strengthen the CCNY's competitive edge in
the graduate education marketplace consisting of early and midcareer
scientists and engineers who seek a graduate credential to enhance
their career prospects. He has been affiliated
to NCWIT
and Break Through Tech
(formally WiTNY) to help underrepresented group to be
in the computing program, wishing to realize K-17 pipeline education,
i.e., K-12 plus 5-year combined B.S. and M.S. degrees
in STEM
academic disciplines.
Professor Kawaguchi served director of Masters degree program in
Information Systems (MIS) from August 2009 to July 2013. He took
responsibility for implementing a thoroughly upgraded MIS program, and
successfully re-launched the program in Fall 2009 after twenty years
of dormancy. His continuous effort resulted in formal approval from
the New York State Education Department in Spring 2010. He carried out
an advertising campaign in an effort to attract highly qualified
applicants, and directed the program with two goals in mind: to
establish the MIS degree as a nationally competitive program and to
ensure adequate resources for covering the science, economics, and
management components of the curriculum.
Professor Kawaguchi served chair of the Computer Science Curriculum
Committee from February 2007 to July 2013. He realized dozens of
curricular updates and improvements such as introducing a computer
science minor to make the program well-positioned to attract students
with scientific and engineering backgrounds, and restructuring the MS
graduate program by taking account of technological advances and
changes in student demand. Further curricular enhancement is in
mission to effect a high quality program with stable enrollment and
brand recognition in its primary New York metropolitan market and
beyond.
In 2004, Professor Kawaguchi was given a one-year fellowship from
Ashridge Business School in
England for his sabbatical work. He has been pursuing a computerized
representation of general human influencing structures with Ashridge
scholars since then. Professor Kawaguchi is a recipient of the CUNY
Certificate of Recognition "Salute to Scholars" in 2001 and 2008. He
was also awarded the Certificate of Recognition by the Grove School of
Engineering in 1999 for his effort of revitalizing the City College's
ACM Student Chapter.
Recent Press Coverage click image for full article
|
Shaping the Digital Tomorrow: CCNY's
Computer Science Department, February 21, 2024 |
The digital horizon is a vast one, with new branches of
study frequently emerging for professionals to gain entry
to. Computer science attracts new students each year as more and
more employers seek out the latest digital assets — and,
consequently, those with the skills to correctly utilize them.
Keeping the Department of Computer Science's research activities in step with these advances has been a top priority for Dr. Akira Kawaguchi, the department chair.... |
| CCNY partners with
top Japanese institutions and Columbia, October 27, 2023 |
The City College of New York's Grove School of Engineering
is partnering with three leading Japanese institutes and Columbia
University on a mission to innovate 5G/6G communications by
developing a Floating Cyber Physical System (F-CPS). Kyushu
Institute of Technology (Kyutech), KDDI Research, Inc., and the
National Institute of Information and Communications Technology
(NICT) are The City College's Japanese collaborators... |
| Announcing New NSF
Award for CCNY Program, October 18, 2023 |
Preparing for a future in which artificial intelligence
(AI), networked systems, autonomous vehicles (AVs) and connected
AVs (CAVs) are integral to society, The City College of New York
is launching an international program to train select students in
mastering Avs. The three-year project in partnership with Turkey's
Istanbul Technical University (ITU) and California-based
autonomous bus company ADASTEC Corp... |
|
Announcing the 2019 NYC Tech
Innovators, February 21, 2020 |
The City College of New York's Akira Kawaguchi, chair of
the Department of Computer Science at The Grove School of
Engineering, is named the 2019 NYC Tech Innovator from the NYC
Tech Talent Pipeline. Kawaguchi and his team are recognized
for their efforts in doubling the number of students
graduating annually with tech-related bachelor's degrees
through the CUNY 2X Tech initiative... |
|
Launching Innovative Data Science Track,
January 17,
2020 |
Connecting the Dots (CTD) is a highly collaborative
project between the flagship schools in the City University of
New York (CUNY) system and the State University of New York
(SUNY). The three-year $400,000 grant from NSF supports the creation
of the signature academic data science track-the New York Data
Science Scholars Program. It will be capable of being readily
integrated with any engineering major and effectively
complement existing computer science majors at both the
undergraduate and graduate levels... |
|
Google grant helps Grove School
create pipeline for women in STEM, September 16, 2019 |
The Grove School of Engineering's Department of Computer
Science at The City College of New York is creating a pipeline to
college for female New York City high school students interested
in computer science. The initiative is made possible by an $18,000
gift from Google. "This generous gift will enable us to work with
our female students to create opportunities that help to recruit
the next generation of a much more diverse tech workforce," said
Akira Kawaguchi, chair of the Department of Computer
Science... |
|
Grove School-Kyutech collaboration seeks to improve Internet, April 29, 2019 |
The City College of New York's Grove School of Engineering
and Japan's Kyushu Institute of Technology (Kyutech) are working
together on a unique project to make the future Internet more
secure and resilient. The joint CCNY- Kyutech team comprises
professors and students at the PhD, graduate and undergraduate
levels from both schools. In their most recent meeting held at the
Grove School, five professors and six students from Kyutech spent
three days with their counterparts at CCNY. In addition to
Saadawi, Grove School faculty involved in the research are Akira
Kawaguchi, Myung Lee and Abbe Mowshowitz... |
|
City College Partners With NYC To Increase Number Of Tech Grads, January 28,
2019 |
The City College of New York has partnered with the NYC
Department of Small Business Services (SBS) on a new initiative
targeted at increasing the number of students graduating with
tech-related bachelor's degrees. "The idea of expanding
opportunities in tech fields aligns perfectly with CCNY's core
mission," CCNY president Vince Boudreau said. "We are excited to
be part of a program which prepares the students of today to take
advantage of employment opportunities in New York City's emerging
technology economy."... |
|
Receiving NSF Grant To Ensure
Internet Safety From Cyber Attacks, October 5, 2018 |
Researchers from The City College of New York's Grove
School of Engineering are working to safeguard the Internet from cyber
attacks and are receiving a boost that could lead to more trustworthy
networks. The boost comes in the form of a grant from the National
Science Foundation to explore advanced resilient Internet
architectures. The $450,000 grant is in partnership with the Kuytech
Institute in Japan and additional support from the Japanese Science
Foundation... |
|
Kyutech and the US's leading
university agree to a partnership for academic exchanges, December
28, 2016 |
Kyutech has made an agreement for a partnership with the
City College of New York (CCNY), one of the leading universities in
the US. President Yuji OIE and the delegates of Kyutech visited CCNY
on December 9th, and President Oie and Provost Mary Driscoll of CCNY
signed the MOU for academic exchanges. With this agreement, both
universities will accelerate the academic exchanges, starting with a
faculty workshop next year and a quarterly-based student outbound
program... |